James Ward Demos P2P In Adobe AIR
Fellow Adobe Evangelist James Ward has posted an example of using Flex SDK to build desktop, mobile, and tablet applications that utilize P2P communication. He makes it look so simple (which, actually, it is)!
Fellow Adobe Evangelist James Ward has posted an example of using Flex SDK to build desktop, mobile, and tablet applications that utilize P2P communication. He makes it look so simple (which, actually, it is)!
Following up from Christophe Coenraets' post on building apps for Android and the RIM PlayBook, Renaun Erickson has posted an example of using MXML with QNX UI components to build apps for the upcoming RIM PlayBook.
Andy Ihnatko at the Chicago Sun-Times has written up a detailed review on the Samsung Galaxy Tab (which I have, and really like). He also tested Flash on the device, and wrote up his thoughts in a section he titled "Mobile Flash: Modern Miracle of the Jet Age" (which means he liked it).
Christophe Coenraets keeps creating incredible apps, content, and tutorials. But this one may be one of his best to date. He has posted Tutorial: Flex for Android in 90 Minutes , a 7 part tutorial (complete with all assets) demonstrating getting started, using views, working with renderers,...
While I am not sure I agree with everything reported to have been said by RIM CEO Jim Balsillie at the Web 2.0 Summit (I personally like the "appification of the Web"), his comments about giving developers options and users what they want is spot on.
I know I needed one of these. But now I *really* need one!
Android Gingerbread (aka Android 2.3) is on its way, and in anticipation of the release the Adobe AIR team has announced AIR 2.5.1 to support the new OS (and to provide some minor bug fixes).
As reported by Sandra Nakama, Comedy Central decided to use Flash to stream Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert's upcoming rally to Flash enabled Android 2.2 (Froyo) devices.
The AIR based Adobe MAX 2010 companion app is now available for download to your Android 2.2 powered device. Just search for "adobe max" on the Android Market.
Nice Mashable story , title says it all.